Category Archives: Style

Punk at The Met – Chaos to Couture

Punk: Chaos to Couture[Pics: Nadia Neophytou] 

The toilets are apparently too clean for those who can recall visiting CBGB’s back in the day, before the epicenter of New York’s punk movement closed its doors in 2006. I  never did get to see, so I don’t have first-hand knowledge, but from what I’ve read and heard, it doesn’t sound like anywhere I would’ve ventured near, even if I had been fortunate to visit the Big Apple – or the club itself – during those heady days.

But the Met Museum’s Costume Institute has created a replica – albeit with less graffiti and a much more neutral smell it seems – of 315 Bowery St in NYC, where the Ramones once held a regular residency. The museum has also created a copy of the boutique that stood – and still stands – at 430 King’s Road in London, where Vivienne Westwood and husband at the time Malcolm McLaren sold their wares. That too, doesn’t escape scrutiny, as I overheard someone say, “it’s at least 10 times bigger than the actual shop.” But the exhibition explores these two folds on either side of the Atlantic, where punk played out – in Britain as more of a working class phenomenon, and in the US, more of a middle-class one.

Punk: Chaos to Couture

The exhibition looks at the aesthetics of punk, and how those features played out in the clothes designed from the late 70s up until now (there’s a Burberry studded jacket that is dangerously delish). The garments are collected into four parts of the D.I.Y aesthetic – Hardware, Bricolage, Graffiti and Agitprop and Destroy, with music playing overhead. So, as you peruse pieces from the Comme des Garçons 2013 collection, with the bits of suits that’ve been cut up and stitched to the waist of the dresses, images of The Clash play in videos ahead, creating an audio and visual accompaniment to the display.

Punk: Chaos to Couture

But there are no mohawks nor original fashion-not-as-fashion items worn by the likes of Syd Vicious or Johnny Rotten on show. Curator Andrew Bolton says this was done on purpose, so as to “avoid the usual cliches and stereotypes associated with punk.” 

“Today, when we think about punk fashion, we think about an iconic uniform of t-shirts, black leather studded jackets and skinny jeans, leather pants or bondage trousers. But this look was adopted late in the cycle, around 1979 when punk in its purest form was almost over,” he says. “The same can be said of mohawks, which we deliberately avoided.”

He acknowledged the contradictory nature of staging such an exhibition: “From the beginning I was keenly aware that punk, like any street style, loses its potency when presented in the context of a museum, so that was the main reason not to include any original garments from Syd Vicious or Johnny Rotten or Patti Smith or Debbie Harry. That is why they are only represented on film, where their fashions could be appreciated more accurately on the body and in performance.”

Punk: Chaos to Couture

As for his comment on what punk’s main anarchists would make of this exhibition? “Punks may be appalled to have this as the focus of museum exhibition, but I believe they would have taken a perverse sense of pride and honour in this. Punks, like many innovators, challenged the boundaries of high art and low art effectively democratizing creativity and invention. They broke all the rules and allowed anything to be possible. We wanted to present punk in a respectful, even reverential, manner that shows punk’s impact, not just on the fashion but on the art in general.”

Wonder what the late Malcolm McLaren – the same man who said he was responsible for turning popular culture into “nothing more than a cheap marketing gimmick” – would have made of it all?

Punk: Chaos to Couture

Punk: Chaos to Couture

Punk: Chaos to Couture

Punk: Chaos to Couture runs from May 9th to 18th August at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

 

Backstage at the 2011 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show

This is what every man’s dream must smell like.

Like fuschia pink robes covering the most coveted models around.

Like silky moisturized limbs and just-styled bed-hair.

Or maybe just like 30 bottles of Victoria’s Secret eau da parfum. Whatever it was, the setting for this year’s Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, the Lexington Armory, was a heavenly place to be when the 40 VS Angels were preparing to step out onto the runway.

Among them, the Angel who would open the show, South Africa’s “meisie from Mooi River”, Candice Swanepoel.

I chatted to her while she was getting her hair done. Here – underneath the sound of a hairdryer – she talks about her favourite cover shoot, being an Angel and, that South African delight, biltong.

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The Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show on 29 November at 10pm on CBS.

Farai fashions the Desert – NYFW SS 2012


 
Zimbabwe-born, UK-raised, US-based designer Farai Simoyi is one of the first African designers I met when I got to New York a few months ago, and she’s become someone to keep a close eye on as she makes her way up the fashion ladder. Hailed as both “Next Best Designer” by Essence.com and “BreakOut Designer” by Time Out New York, Farai is attracting the right kind of attention as she does so.

The theme of Desert Oasis was brought to the Farai Simoyi runway in Saturday’s show, through the camel and sand tones she used for this collection. Embodying a sense of thriving in a harsh environment, the collection focussed on flowing but structured kaftans, rouged flower details, lace swimsuits and some striking prints, which, as we’ve seen coming out of other shows, is a great trend to be taking note of for the coming season.

More on Farai Simoyi here and here.